A Vignette Of Breathless Foreboding Shadowing The Life Of Animals Who Were Put On Stake During World War I

There are many unlucky souls on this earth who don’t receive all the beauty and the bonty that life has to give and today we will unfold the story of such souls. You wont dare to stretch a leg on the land of World War I which is spilled by blood of so many lives. Watch carefully and see how every heart received a jackhammer, and slowly and slowly a dark light spreading all over the battle field killing so many innocent animals and humans. Yes, we are sorry that you are going to feel that deadly wrath with full sting of it while watching the images below.

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1. In Belgium, after the Battle of Haelen, a surviving horse is used in the removal of dead horses killed in the conflict

2. A dog-handler reads a message brought by a messenger dog, who had just swum across a canal in France, during World War I

3. A British Mark V tank passes by a dead horse in the road in Peronne, France in 1918

4. Camels line a huge watering station, Asluj, Palestinian campaign

5. Western Front, shells carried on horseback

6. The breakthrough west of St. Quentin, Aisne, France. Artillery drawn by horses advances through captured British positions on March 26, 1918

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7. An episode in Walachia, Romania

8. German Red Cross Dogs head to the front

9. A soldier and his horse in gas masks, ca. 1918

10. On the Western Front, a dead German artilleryman and several draft horses

11. Australian Camel Corps going into action at Sharia near Beersheba

12. Belgian refugees leaving Brussels, their belongings in a wagon pulled by a dog

13. The feline mascot of the light cruiser HMAS Encounter, peering from the muzzle of a 6-inch gun

14. A draft horse hitched to a post, its partner just killed by shrapnel

15. A message is attached to a carrier pigeon by British troops on the Western Front

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16. These homing pigeons are doing much to save the lives of our boys in France. They act as efficient messengers and dispatch bearers not only from division to division and from the trenches to the rear but also are used by our aviators to report back the results of their observation

17. An Indian elephant, from the Hamburg Zoo, used by Germans in Valenciennes, France to help move tree trunks

18. A messenger dog with a spool attached to a harness for laying out new electric line

19. Turkish cavalry exercises on the Saloniki front

20. A corporal, probably on the staff of the 2nd Australian general hospital, holds a koala, a pet or mascot in Cairo

21. Red Crescent Hospital at Hafir Aujah

22. At Kemmel, West Flanders, Belgium. The effect of enemy artillery fire upon German ambulances

23. Members of the Royal Scots Greys cavalry regiment rest their horses by the side of the road

24. Sergeant Stubby was the most decorated war dog of World War I and the only dog to be promoted to sergeant through combat

25. The escalating warfare drove Britain and France to import horses and mules from overseas by the hundreds of thousands

26. A pigeon with a small camera attached. The trained birds were used experimentally by German citizen Julius Neubronner, before and during the war years

27. Bandages retrieved from the kit of a British Dog

28. German soldiers pose near a horse mounted with a purpose-built frame, used to accommodate a captured Russian Maxim M1910 machine gun complete with its wheeled mount and ammunition box

29. Gas attack on the West Front, near St. Quentin 1918 — a German messenger dog loosed by his handler

30. A single soldier on his horse, during a cavalry patrol in World War I